I’m delighted to be bringing the blog tour for this book to a close. Karla’s Choice was one of my most anticipated reads of the season, written by Harkaway – son of John Le Carre – who carries on the legacy of Smiley v Karla from his late father’s books to bring us a completely new novel that sits neatly between The Spy Who Came in From the Cold and Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.
It could have been awkward, but Harkaway is such a good novelist anyway, and of course he grew up with George Smiley, the Circus and their adversaries as his father was writing the books. I’m very pleased to report IT’S A TRIUMPH!!!
After the debacle in Berlin that led to Alec Leamas’ death (in TSWCiFtC) that Smiley blames himself for among others, he has retired for the first time to get to know his wife Ann again.
Having done away with the Circus as his too-demanding mistress, Smiley lived between libraries and love, and came as close to contentment as a man of his peculiar constitution is able. Without a tie and with several pairs of spectacles distributed around his reading-room lair, you might have taken him for anything from a schoolmaster recovering after the termtime’s excessive use of restorative alcohol to a bibliophile ticket collector newly pensioned from the Cornish Riviera Express.
In the early spring of 1963, there was a rumour – unconfirmed and a little scandalous – that George Smiley might almost be happy.
He and Ann are due to travel to Geneva and on to Vienna and St Moritz – but the arrival of a sportscar driven by Amelia McCraig signifies trouble. She is there to persuade Smiley to come back, just for a couple of days, to do a job for Control that needs his subtlety. He’s already refused twice, but this time he does give in – we knew he would, naturally. He still plans to catch up with Ann in Vienna – she doesn’t believe it!
The job: to ‘walk in’ a young Hungarian emigre woman whose boss was, unknownst to her, a) not whom he seemed, and b) in fear of his life from Russian reprisals. Lázló Bánatí is a small publisher and his only other employee is Susanna Gero, who is his general assistant and slush pile reader. This day, she arrived at work to find him not there – he was usually first. Then a knock on the door and a sixtyish Slav-featured man was there. He spoke:
“I am Miki. I am here to kill your Mr Bánatí on the personal instruction of a senior officer of the Thirteenth Directorate for the Committee for State Security of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. But I have changed my mind. I am Miki, and God has told me I will not be a murderer any more.”
Instead of just calling the police, she locks him in the office, hot-foots it to Bánatí’s flat, finds that empty, and then goes with Miki in tow to the Adams Secretarial Agency where she was sure that Rose Jeremy would be able to help. She can – she puts a coded call through to Millie McCraig, who will later hand her over to Smiley to debrief her. As they enter the building, they bump into an old friend.
“George, my dear man! What on earth are you doing here? It was a voice that belonged on horseback, equally ready to command cavalry or hounds.
[…] His mouth twitched at her assessing gaze; inclining his body slightly, in something not quite a bow, he put out his hand.
“Hello,” he said, meaning: would she like to go to bed? “I’m Bill.”
Lothario Bill Haydon is not the only character from TTSS that we’ll meet. Toby Esterhase, Jim Prideaux, Peter Guillam and Connie Sachs all feature too, plus Control himself. It took me right back to the original TV series with Alec Guinness. As much as I love and admired Gary Oldman as Smiley in the film, my Smiley is Alec Guinness, and he’s surely Harkaway’s too. I could imagine Ian Richardson as Bill Haydon saying the quote above too, can’t you? We meet new characters too, including East End forger Raghuraman Vishwakarma, whom Harkaway would like to write more about… (Does that mean another book? I do hope so!)
As the search for Bánatí aka former Hungarian agent Ferencz Róka and his missing son, who seems to have sparked off this crisis, begins, Smiley will head first for Berlin. This is where Mundt, who had been Leamas’ target still plays a double game, but soon Smiley finds himself joined by Susanna – as none of the British team speak fluent Hungarian, setting her up as his travelling salesman’s secretary!
As you can imagine, things hot up pretty fast, as the numerous twists and turns play out and we move to Budapest; it’s absolutely thrilling to see the guys at work in the field. But I can hear you ask, ‘What about Karla?’ I’m not going to say a thing, other than that Harkaway has done something rather clever that his father would have been very proud of with the enigma that is Karla. You’ll just have to read the book for yourself to discover what.
Source: Review copy – thank you! Viking hardback, 320 pages. Buy at Blackwell’s or Amazon UK via my affiliate links.
I heard Richard Osman praising this last week – it sounds great. Such an intimidating legacy to take on!
But who better than his son, who has inherited his father’s skill as a novelist anyway.
I’ve seen a lot of publicity about this one in the mainstream media and I’m delighted to hear you review it with such wholehearted approval. When you get the bold block capitals out Annabel, I know we must all be in for a treat, heh. Will definitely get hold of this at some point – quite possibly it’s one of Mr L’s Christmas presents this year!
I’m sure he’ll enjoy it – esp if a fan of TTSS. Although I grew up with James Bond and love the franchise for all its faults, the grubbier end of the spy world with Deighton’s Harry Palmer, and then TTSS etc have always been more interesting to me. And I have watched the original TTSS at least 5 times through over the years.
I was a big fan of Harkaway’s Angelmaker. Good to hear that he’s done his father proud with this.
This sounds really intriguing. I did not know that Le Carré’s son was also an author. Interesting.
I’m glad you rate this – but I really need to read a few more Smiley novels first I think if I’m to appreciate the context it’s based on. But it sounds good!